Domain Invest

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Friday, 7 September 2007

Buyer’s Remorse: No Love for Medicare Part D on the Campaign Trail

Posted on 09:00 by Unknown
So Many Happy Faces! None are Running for President in 2008



The Medicare prescription drug benefit known as Part D has been an unmitigated blessing for Big Pharma at a time when good news has been hard to find. It has greatly expanded drug coverage for senior citizens, providing a boost in prescription volumes. And it has shifted a large chunk of the market out of the price controlled Medicaid program, giving a healthy margin bump for many blockbuster brands.

It is also a political orphan, one that will face an especially harsh winter as the primary phase of the Presidential campaign moves towards its climax.

The Democrats make no secret of how they feel about Part D. Remember price negotiation? The idea may have died in the Senate, but it will be reborn this fall once Congress finishes its serious legislative work. Expect hearings and reports criticizing Part D prices—with the themes trumpeted by the Democratic candidates on the campaign trail.

None of the front runners in the Democratic party supported Part D, though the thinking here is that they secretly love it. After all, the program pumps hundreds of billions of taxpayer dollars into federal health benefits while allowing the candidates to bash Republicans for catering to the profiteers in Big Pharma and the insurance industry.

The problem is, as Jeffrey Young writes in The Hill, even the Republican contenders have nothing nice to say about Part D. Its not that they are turning on the pharmaceutical industry per se, its just that they don’t see anything to gain from talking to conservative voters about a massive expansion to federal health care entitlements.

Its no different than the 2006 Congressional campaign, which featured Democrats around the country attacking Part D—and Republicans changing the subject. Supporters of Part D, like former CMS Administrator Tom Scully, claim that the Republican Party should have embraced the program during last year’s campaign, instead of running away from it. It certainly is hard to believe the GOP would have fared any worse in the elections if they had.

Still, if the Republican legislators who enacted Part D refused to brag about it in 2006, you can expect the Republican Presidential contenders to stay even farther away from it. As The Hill’s Young points out, one of the top tier GOP candidates—John McCain—actually voted against the law creating the program. Another, Fred Thompson, voted against earlier plans to create a drug benefit, but left the Senate before the Part D law passed in 2003. The rest of the leading Republican contenders were not in Congress when Part D passed and hence have no stake in defending the program.

So expect a winter of Democratic attacks on Part D, with little or no response from the Republican campaigns.

Once the Presidential campaign shifts gears to focus on the general election in November 2008—the party nominations could be locked up as early as the first week of February—the dynamics may change.

The Democratic nominee is sure to keep attacking Part D. But the Republican nominee may be more eager to counterpunch. With the nomination locked up, fear of alienating small-government conservatives may be less important than the opportunity to cast Part D as model for public/private partnerships in expanding health coverage across the US.

Until then, don’t expect too many kind words about Part D on the campaign trail.

Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook
Posted in Drug Pricing, Hillary Clinton, Medicare, Part D, politics | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Ventana Accepts $3.4 Billion
    Roche finally nabs its man. Or in this case, its diagnostics company. All it took was an extra $14.50 per share. From the companies' pre...
  • Merck: Embracing Externalization, From the Top Down
    Updated Below . One business magazine greeted the tenure of Dick Clark as Merck's new CEO in 2005 with the instruction to "say hel...
  • While You Were Coming Back
    It would be wrong for us not to mention the Red Sox in this space, the Boston nine having completed their three-game comback victory over th...
  • Unusual Suspects: If Pfizer Decides to Really Rattle the R&D Cages
    Yesterday, we listed a group of people -- we called them the usual suspects -- that we think Pfizer will try to woo if it ends up turning to...
  • Avandia and Rezulin: Parallels that Should Make GSK Nervous
    History doesn’t repeat itself but it does rhyme. That old Mark Twain saying must be making GlaxoSmithKline sweat as Avandia is starting to ...
  • Private Equity Goes Public
    One of the simplest metrics we have to measure interest in a company or industry is just how jammed the rooms are at the JP Morgan conferenc...
  • High Noon at Myogen
    Most VC meetings provide a feel-good story for the portfolio CEOs—usually a variation on the business resurrection theme. The Atlas Venture ...
  • While You Were Watching the Upsets
    This weekend we were in Cardiff for the Rugby World Cup quarterfinal between France and New Zealand, which saw France upsetting the favorite...
  • Deals of the Week: You Can't Always Get What You Want
    It's been a busy--and, for some, disheartening--week in biopharma land. Just three days after researchers disclosed that Vytorin , the h...
  • Sorry, I Still Don’t Get It
    Pfizer launched its first TV campaign for Exubera this past week in an attempt to breathe a little life into the stalled inhaled insulin br...

Categories

  • Abbott
  • activist shareholders
  • ADHD
  • advisory committees
  • alliances
  • Alnylam
  • Alzheimer's disease
  • Amgen
  • Andrew von Eschenbach
  • Andrew Witty
  • Astellas
  • AstraZeneca
  • Avandia
  • Avastin
  • Barack Obama
  • Barr
  • Bayer
  • Big Pharma
  • BIO
  • Biogen Idec
  • biologics
  • biosimilars
  • blogging
  • BMS
  • Boston Scientific
  • brand names
  • business development
  • business models
  • cancer vaccines
  • Carl Icahn
  • CBO
  • CDER
  • Celgene
  • Cephalon
  • China
  • clinical development
  • CMS
  • co-promotes
  • comparative effectiveness
  • conference
  • Congress
  • consumer genomics
  • corporate culture
  • corporate governance
  • corporate venture capital
  • CVS Caremark
  • Cytyc
  • David Kessler
  • deals of the week
  • debt financing
  • Diabetes
  • diagnostics
  • Dick Clark
  • drug approvals
  • drug delivery
  • drug discovery
  • drug eluting stents
  • Drug Pricing
  • drug safety
  • drug samples
  • DTC Advertising
  • e-health
  • Eisai
  • Elan
  • Eli Lilly
  • Emphasys
  • emphysema
  • Endo
  • epo
  • Euro-Biotech Forum
  • Exits
  • Exubera
  • FDA
  • FDA/CMS Summit
  • FDAAA
  • Film and TV
  • financing
  • FOBs
  • Forest Labs
  • Galvus
  • gene therapy
  • Genentech
  • General Electric
  • generics
  • Genzyme
  • Gleevec
  • Google
  • GSK
  • Guidant
  • haircuts
  • Happy Holidays
  • HCV
  • Headhunting
  • Health Care Reform
  • hedge funds
  • Henry Waxman
  • hGH
  • HHS
  • Hillary Clinton
  • Hologic
  • hostile takeovers
  • hypertension
  • ImClone
  • IMS Health
  • In vitro diagnostics
  • In3
  • India
  • insomnia
  • instrumentation
  • insulin
  • Inverness
  • IP
  • IPO
  • IPO pricing
  • Isis Pharmaceuticals
  • Israel
  • IT
  • JAMA
  • Januvia
  • Japan
  • John McCain
  • Johnson and Johnson
  • JP Morgan
  • LaMattina
  • lawsuits
  • layoffs
  • legislation
  • Life-Cycle Management
  • Lipitor
  • Lucentis
  • management succession
  • Mark McClellan
  • marketing
  • Martin Mackay
  • medical devices
  • Medicare
  • Medicare Part D
  • Medimmune
  • Medtech Insight
  • Medtronic
  • Merck
  • Merck-Serono
  • mergers and acquisitions
  • Michael McCaughan
  • Millennium
  • mmm beer
  • MRI
  • multiple sclerosis
  • music
  • nanotechnology
  • NEJM
  • new drug approvals
  • new funds
  • NICE
  • NicOx
  • NIH
  • Nobel Prize
  • Novartis
  • Novo Nordisk
  • Nycomed
  • off-label promotion
  • oncology
  • ophthalmology
  • Orthopedics
  • osteoporosis
  • OTC drugs
  • Out-Partnering
  • Oxycontin
  • pain
  • Part D
  • Patient Advocacy
  • PDUFA
  • personalized medicine
  • Pfizer
  • pharmacy benefits
  • PhRMA
  • politics
  • poll results
  • PR
  • prasugrel
  • Presidential Election
  • Press Release of the Week
  • Primary Care
  • private equity
  • Procter and Gamble
  • PSA
  • Purdue Pharma
  • rare diseases
  • reimbursement
  • research and development productivity
  • research and development strategies
  • reverse mergers
  • rimonabant
  • RiskMAP
  • RNAi
  • Roche
  • Roger Longman
  • royalties
  • sales forces
  • Sanofi-aventis
  • Schering-Plough
  • Science Matters
  • Sepracor
  • shameless self-promotion
  • share buybacks
  • Shire
  • Sirtris
  • Smith and Nephew
  • Solvay
  • SPACs
  • spec pharma
  • spin-outs
  • sports
  • Start-Up
  • statins
  • Steve Nissen
  • Stryker
  • Supreme Court
  • Takeda
  • Teva
  • Thanksgiving
  • The RPM Report
  • UCB
  • vaccines
  • Velcade
  • Ventana
  • venture capital
  • venture debt
  • Venture Round
  • Vertex
  • Vioxx
  • Vytorin
  • Wacky World of Generics
  • While You Were ...
  • Wyeth
  • Zetia
  • Zimmer
  • ZymoGenetics

Blog Archive

  • ►  2008 (76)
    • ►  February (25)
    • ►  January (51)
  • ▼  2007 (329)
    • ►  December (32)
    • ►  November (42)
    • ►  October (37)
    • ▼  September (33)
      • Co-promotes: No Longer Biotech’s Holy Grail
      • Ortho Settlement Doesn't Settle Everything
      • Another Look at Asia
      • What About Specialty?
      • PSA Day 2: Buying into Biologics
      • Smaller Big Pharma and the Hybrid Future
      • How to Improve Drug Development? Fail Fast!
      • Merck: Embracing Externalization, From the Top Down
      • IPOs: Just Another Facet of the M&A Auction
      • Can't Keep Quiet About This
      • While You Were Packing for New York
      • Strange Bedfellows: Novartis Marries VC & Business...
      • Going, Going.....Google
      • The Right Kind of FDA Defense
      • Shire's Portfolio Solution
      • FDARA: Changing Drug Development in the Guise of S...
      • Sofinnova Partners Talks China
      • The Next Big Thing...
      • Can a Sleep Drug Awaken Demand from European Consu...
      • A New VC On The Block. Finally!
      • While You Were in Italy
      • EPO’s Future Back in FDA’s Hands
      • Third Rock Ready To Roll
      • More Bad News Coming on Avandia
      • Who's Sorry Now? Big Pharma Edition
      • Big Pharma: Beware the Coupon Clippers
      • While You Were Finally Watching Some Football
      • Buyer’s Remorse: No Love for Medicare Part D on th...
      • Why Financiers Like Virtual Companies
      • The Cost of FDA's Credibility Gap
      • EPO Fatigue: Amgen Hopes History Doesn’t Repeat It...
      • Science Matters: A small personalized medicine bai...
      • While You Weren't Working
    • ►  August (29)
    • ►  July (39)
    • ►  June (39)
    • ►  May (43)
    • ►  April (16)
    • ►  March (13)
    • ►  February (5)
    • ►  January (1)
  • ►  2006 (8)
    • ►  December (3)
    • ►  November (5)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile